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It's been said again and again, when it comes to getting people to visit your
site (and stay there for more than 5 seconds), the quality of your content rules
supreme. But once you've bowed to interest, saluted relevance and kow-towed
to originality, who else must you pay homage to for recognition in the court
of website stickiness?
The two jewels in the crown of Presentation, for it is of course Presentation
who is Queen, are structure and graphical design. Let's take a very brief look
at them both.
Structure
We're interested here in how you order the contents of your site, in how you
link the different components and sections together. Your objective is to make
the experience of browsing your site as straightforward as possible for your
visitors.
So how do you go about achieving a clear, intuitive structure? For larger more
complicated sites it helps to draw a chart of all the pages, showing how they
connect to each other (this process isn't such a bad idea for smaller sites
either). Try and keep everything logical and stick to the '3 click rule' as
much as possible. (The '3 click rule' - a user shouldn't have to click more
than 3 times to get to a page).
Once you've worked out a logical site structure, the basis for your navigation
system should pop out. Don't go and spoil it all by using a fancy (usually Flash)
navigation system that's frustratingly difficult to work out!
Graphical design
What you do with your design is generally down to personal taste and branding
requirements. Take a look on the Internet and you'll see successful designs
from the extremely detailed to the minimalist.
Note that whilst people will say 'but look at Google' to justify a plain (ugly!)
design, well chosen colour schemes and visual interest will give your site a
positive boost.
No matter what style you go for, there are some rules that will always apply:
- Be consistent, the look shouldn't change across the site
- Busy backgrounds hardly ever work
- Take it easy on the flashing ads and graphics
- Watch out for clashing colours
- Dark text on light backgrounds work best
- The fewer fonts and text colours there are, the better
- Use high quality images and graphics
Logical structure and pleasing design make for intuitive navigation and an
easier more enjoyable browsing experience. With just a little thought you'll
be rewarded with visitors who pay more attention to your content and not the
pain and effort needed to get to it.
About the Author:
Trevor Lewis has over 10 years in the Software Industry. He is currently a Senior
Consultant at EMNM.
EMNM offer a range of new media design services including interactive CD presentations
and website design. |